The Hamilton Spectator

DOWN AND OUT

Gritty drama “Ray Donovan” returns to The Movie Network on Sunday, with a change of scenery as characters establish themselves in New York City.

- BY KENNETH ANDEEL

Sometimes a change of scenery is necessary to move forward and mend. Other times, however, if you bring enough pain with you, a change of scenery will not suffice. When season 6 of “Ray Donovan” commences on Sunday, Oct. 28, on The Movie Network, the characters in the series and the fans watching it will together begin to explore the question of how deeply new surroundin­gs can help to surmount the trauma initiated at the conclusion of the show’s fifth season.

With five years in the books, “Ray Donovan” has had itself figured out for some time, devising and then settling into a recognizab­le narrative rhythm. The show’s mixture of family drama and seedy criminal intrigue follows Ray Donovan (Liev Schreiber, “The Manchurian Candidate,” 2004), a Boston native employed in Los Angeles as a “fixer” for a law firm. Ray’s job requires solving his clients’ emergencie­s in creative, frequently illegal ways. When it comes to executing solutions, there isn’t much that Ray deems unacceptab­le, and his tactics range from blackmail and threats to the actual instigatio­n of mayhem and murder.

The character occupies the sort of unstable and uncomforta­ble territory that was trailblaze­d in recent years by such seminal television antiheroes as Tony Soprano (James Gandolfini, “The Sopranos”) or Walter White (Bryan Cranston, “Breaking Bad”). The audience watches these characters struggle with their shaky moral codes, striving for self-improvemen­t but consistent­ly resorting to the performanc­e of terrible deeds whenever challenged.

Five seasons worth of “Ray Donovan” have exposed Ray’s contradict­ory nature: he’s fluctuated between devoted family man and neglectful parent/inveterate adulterer; and alternated between clever, virtuous strategy and a retreat to brute violence. Complicate­d (and sometimes just plain bad) protagonis­ts have become the norm in ambitious adult dramas, and “Ray Donovan” enthusiast­s have grown accustomed to balancing admiration with condemnati­on when it comes to Schreiber’s titular antihero.

Ray’s family life has always been a central part of the series. The first major conflict of the show involved the release of Ray’s reprobate father, Mickey (Jon Voight, “National Treasure,” 2004), from prison and the uncertaint­y about how Mickey would reintegrat­e into the lives of his three sons — Ray, Terry (Eddie Marsan, “Miami Vice,” 2006) and Bunchy (Dash Mihok, “The Thin Red Line,” 1998) — and about how willing Mickey was to manipulate, abuse and betray them (the answer turned out to be “very”).

Ray’s wife, Abby (Paula Malcomson, “Deadwood”), has been another pillar of the show, and her imperfect but devoted relationsh­ip with Ray, as well as her own struggles with personal demons, have offered a lot of drama. In the season 4 premiere, Abby was diagnosed with cancer, and to the ferocious dismay of many fans, her story permanentl­y concluded in season 5 when she succumbed to the disease and Malcomson departed the show.

The season 5 finale set up an unresolved cliffhange­r as Ray, reacting to the loss of his wife, took a plunge off of a 10-storey building into New York’s East River, leaving fans to speculate whether it was some sort of dream sequence or a literal turn of events in the narrative.

Promotiona­l material for season 6 reveals that Ray did indeed attempt suicide but was unsuccessf­ul. Previews show Ray being rescued from his act of desperatio­n by the timely interventi­on of an NYPD patrolman, Sean (Mac) McGrath (Domenick Lombardozz­i, “The Wire”), who pulls Ray from the East River and engages the devastated man in an unexpected brawl to keep him from wading back in to his doom.

Ray’s fateful encounter with Mac and his new associatio­n with the sometimes corrupt fraternity of the New York Police Department will be a major part of season 6, and another accomplish­ed character actor joins the cast to play a different police officer: Tony Curran (“Doctor Who”) will portray Sgt. Mikey (Rad) Radulovic and will offer another point of entry for Ray as he becomes entangled within the culture and affairs of the NYPD.

 ??  ?? Liev Schreiber stars in “Ray Donovan”
Liev Schreiber stars in “Ray Donovan”
 ??  ?? Lola Glaudini joins the new season of “Ray Donovan”
Lola Glaudini joins the new season of “Ray Donovan”

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